SPCR is starting a project to explore solutions for electronic whining noise from video cards, motherboards, power supplies and other computer components. We seek participation from our community. You can help by donating products exhibiting high pitched noise that bothers you. We will examine these products and try to determine the sources and reasons for the noise, then explore different ways to eliminate or reduce the noise.

Send us only products that you don't mind ever seeing again. The product could become inoperative in the course of our investigations and end up in recycling. On the other hand, if we succeed in reducing or eliminating the noise, we will let you know and give you the option of paying for the shipping to get the now-quieter unit back for you to use and enjoy.

For the sake of relevance and usefulness, please donate only products that are not older than ~2 yrs. Higher power/efficiency devices are most interesting, because in general, these are the kinds of products that seem to exhibit more electronic noise, more often; they generally tend to be newer. If you have any doubts or questions about whether the product(s) you're thinking of donating for the project are suitable, please post your queries here.

The results of this project will be published as an article, documenting our experiences, and hopefully, a how-to DIY guide on how to reduce or eliminate electronic noise in these computer components. Target completion date is 6~8 weeks, but this depends a lot on your responses. We certainly will not have enough data/experience with fewer than ~20 samples; this is my arbitrary minimum number for article/guide publication.

SPCR361-4617 Fraser StVancouver, BC V5W3A6Canada

Local contributors may drop their whining components off directly. For details, please contact me by email -- mikec at silentpcreview dot com

I have an OCZ Z series 550W power supply which whine at medium-high loads; I can loan it for these experiments, since it is in spare status. I live in New Westminster, so I can drop it off personally. As contact: use the board PM or e-mail.

If you're still accepting samples I may have a Corsair Builder CX430 (v1) that has pretty bad coil whine when plugged in with the system off. As far as I know, the more recent V2 also has the same problem.

Too bad, though I think it was some 6-7 years since last I had a problem at home with a whining system component. I suspect the power lines around here are simply too good to induce the problem by putting the little extra stress on otherwise good components. I part time in a store and mostly notice that kind of noise from low budget laptops nowadays.

I haven't had any whistling/whining electronics in some time (touch wood), and most of that was associated with CRTs. I do remember reading some where about whining SSDs and other cases of PSU coil whine being induced by SSDs.

This aught to be very interesting. SPCR might identify patterns of noise generation that have been and are being overlooked by manufacturers... just because they present themselves in what appears to be an erratic manner.

On every Core i7 system I have (one HP laptop (not sure which rev/stepping), and one desktop (i7-2600K, rev D2 / stepping 7)), I have to turn this feature off, simply because the transition between the two CPU sleep states is audible. Yeah, even within a Fractal Design R3 case I can still hear the CPU transitioning between the two. I solve the problem on my laptop using ThrottleStop (since the HP system BIOS offers no way to disable C3/C6), and I solve the problem on my desktop using the system BIOS. Lenovo laptops (which I also use at work) have the same problem, but offer the disable feature via the BIOS.

I should note this noise isn't audible to a lot of people, but is to some others. In fact, at work (where my laptop is) most of my colleagues can't hear the noise. There's only one other than me who can hear it -- and only after I pointed it out to him and asked him to listen closely (he's also a musician, heh). Now it drives him just as crazy as it does me.

Here's a Youtube video which exhibits the problem. Just search Google for "Core i7 c3 c6 high pitch" and you'll find lots of hits.

This is a pretty well-known problem, but it's also pretty low-level. Good luck on getting this one fixed; will require getting past a lot of red tape with Intel.

So it seems to me that MSI at one time cared about this problem, fixed it (yay!), but then forgot it was occurring and now we're back at square one. What's amusing is that the GTX 200 series came out in roughly 2008/2009, and it's now 2012. So in only a few years they forgot.

They aren't the only one either. Google for something like "video card frequency noise" and be amazed.

3) Logitech mice.

I have been tracking this problem with their mice since 2004, and finally in 2011 a hardware engineer (just a random guy off the Internet) contacted me and told me what the problem was, as well as the details/harmonics involving why it happens. The issue is caused by ceramic capacitors. Simply replacing them with tantalum caps solves the problem. This issue has also begun to affect certain models of Microsoft mice.

I would LOVE if you would really drill Logitech on this one, hard core. As I said, I've been trying to get it solved for EIGHT YEARS.

Finally, and I'm going to bold this, because so many people respond to posts of mine like this with "I have Product X and I don't hear what you're talking about": it all depends on the level of sensitivity of one's hearing. I happen to have extremely sensitive ears and quite a large frequency range is audible to me (a colleague of mine used a software tone generator to generate frequencies of pulse/square waves to see where my limit was -- it's something like 8-9kHz higher than the average person). So please do not state something ignorant like the above. This ignorance is exactly why these products emit noise to begin with: the person designing them and the persons QA'ing have normal or sub-par hearing.

Shoot - I knew I should have kept my noisy components instead of getting rid of them ASAP.

I sign koitsu's statement on sensitivity, and can attest to the Logitech mouse whine problem. I've heard it too, and it's not pleasant. If I come across any samples, I'll be sure to send them SPCR's way.

Any chance of reviving this project? I'm wondering if it would be possible to at least compile a list of configurations that whine from the forum and see what patterns emerge. I'm seeing some anecdotal reports of whining video cards or PSUs here and there on the forum, but it's scattered.

No, it's the speedstep transform to lowvolt that causes it (when you put the CPU under load the noise dissappears and it definetly comes from the CPU or really near the CPU and not the PSU)... I'm not talking about buzzing, but high pitch/freqency sqeaking like dog whistle.

Few hear this because they have "bad" hearing and case + fan muffles it.

I run my PC with the case open and with a super silent CPU fan, also hearing is a bit too god...

From my perspective, high pitch electronic noise is the the most important issue that needs to be addressed in building a silent computing environment.

Fluid dynamic drive bearings and large, slow, quiet fans have largely eliminated the old problem areas of noise. With just a modicum of attention to detail you can build a high performing system that's quite quiet. (Even the fan noise on my Asus GTX660Ti, which doesn't get pushed very hard, is acceptably low.) Where once I lined my computer cases with special foam, now I can hardly tell the differnce when I leave the side door off the Antec P183 case that's sitting next to me.

BUT, what remains is a low level, high pitched, electronic whine that pervades my office. I don't always pay attention to it, but when I leave the room I realize how exhausting it is. It's extremely hard to localize, and seems to reflect the cumulative load of multiple monitors and other components, and their interactions THIS is the noice problem I don't know how to solve.

I have no experience with high-power transformers or the like producing a coil whine or something similar under high load.

So I'm not sure what I'm saying here is useful. But I have had a few power supplies / adapters that were badly built apparently and which caused the device itself (the unit itself) to produce a nasty distortion. One of these is my current monitor that I still want to either replace, or just demand a replacement, or whatever. I mean it's a long time ago since I bought it but these stores try to make you feel that you are unwelcome after they have taken your money. It's like, "sure we are customer-friendly, but we turn our backs on you with a fake smile the moment you are gone."

So I intend to cause a bit of a ruckus there . In a while.

Anyway, I had an adapter for a Cambridge Audio DAC that caused the DAC to produce a whine while in standby. Same for the monitor, it only does it in standby, two modes: soft standby and "press-power-button-to-soft-turn-it-off" standby. And then I have a little USB thingy for my phone that produces a really nasty whine when no phone is connected. I get nightmares from it, seriously.

And then I have a faulty tube light for my kitchen light that I need to replace and if I turn it on I start feeling real weird in the head real fast.

So that is all I can contribute.

I must say, reading back when this topic was posted, perhaps you (MikeC) has slightly too high expectations for a project like this, to want to complete it within several weeks. When I saw this topic I initially assumed or perceived or thought that it would be something more of a knowledge base kinda thing that could help development and choices in the long run and for the long run.

I have a free after rebate 80 plus bronze 350 watt power supply I got from TigerDirect that has awful high-pitched whine. I think the brand is Cooler Master. But, since the initiative has been declared dead I'll hold onto it I suppose.

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